Sir David Evennett (Bexleyheath and Crayford) (Con) I beg to move,
That this House has considered the matter of tackling obesity. It
is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship this afternoon, Mr
Dowd. I am incredibly grateful to be able to raise the important
subject of tackling obesity, which I believe is vital to our
country’s future. I am grateful to see colleagues here from both
sides of the House, as tackling obesity requires a cross-party
approach. I...Request free trial
(Bexleyheath and Crayford)
(Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered the matter of tackling
obesity.
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship this afternoon,
Mr Dowd. I am incredibly grateful to be able to raise the
important subject of tackling obesity, which I believe is vital
to our country’s future. I am grateful to see colleagues here
from both sides of the House, as tackling obesity requires a
cross-party approach. I particularly welcome my right hon. Friend
the Minister, who is also a personal friend. I have worked
closely with her in the past, and I know how interested in and
concerned about this issue she is.
Obesity is a major public health problem and a global concern.
According to the World Health Organisation, worldwide obesity has
nearly tripled since 1975. Most of the world’s population live in
countries where issues associated with being overweight or obese
kill more people than issues associated with being underweight,
and 39 million children under the age of five were overweight or
obese in 2020. These are quite shocking statistics. However, the
problem is of particular concern in the United Kingdom, where we
have the third highest obesity rates in Europe, behind only Malta
and Turkey, and where we have the third highest in the G7, behind
only Canada and the US. Almost one in three adults here is now
classified as obese, a dramatic increase from the one in 10
adults in 1970. The increase in this country has been much
greater than in other western European countries, such as France,
Germany and Italy.
The health survey for England monitors trends in our national
health and care. It found that a higher proportion of men than
women were either overweight or obese—69%, compared with 59%. The
highest rates of obesity were found among the lowest
socioeconomic groups. Almost 70% of people in the most deprived
quintile of English localities are classed as living with obesity
or being overweight, compared with 59% of those in the
richest.
(Strangford) (DUP)
I commend the right hon. Gentleman on securing this debate and
apologise to him in advance: but for an AGM that I am attending
at five o’clock, I would have participated in the whole
debate.
According to the Department of Health back home, 65% of adults in
Northern Ireland are obese, which is quite a shocking figure.
There are now plans for a consultation, which highlights the need
to make healthier food more affordable. Does the right hon.
Gentleman agree that this must be a priority for every region of
this great United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland,
and that that must be done in partnership with our own agrifood
sector? It has a role to play—maybe a financial role, as much as
a role in guidance. When it comes to the Minister’s reply, does
the right hon. Gentleman agree that partnership with the
Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs might be
advantageous?
I am grateful to the hon. Gentleman for giving us that
information from Northern Ireland. Of course, this is something
that we need to work on across all four of our countries that
make up the United Kingdom. I am sure that co-operation is the
best way forward.
Behind these statistics are real people—our people, not just
statistics: parents, grandparents, children, friends and
neighbours. Overweight people are more likely to experience other
health issues as a result of excess weight. There are real
consequences, too, for the quality of life of our people. People
who are obese are seven times more likely to develop type 2
diabetes. Some 11% of obese adults reported in the health survey
for England that they had a diagnosis of diabetes from a doctor.
The figure was less than half that among overweight adults, at
5%, and it was just 3% among those who were neither overweight
nor obese.
People with obesity are two to three times more likely to have
high blood pressure and other consequential health issues.
Obesity is a risk factor for depression and is associated with
social isolation and less physical activity, contributing to an
increased risk of dementia. Obesity between the ages of 35 and 65
can actually increase dementia risk in later life by some 30%. Of
course, excess weight puts strain on joints, increasing the risk
of musculoskeletal conditions. Other health problems from excess
weight include cardiovascular disease, liver disease and many
common cancers. Obesity is actually the second biggest
preventable cause of cancer.
As well as the costs to individuals’ health and wellbeing, there
is the real cost to the economy, businesses, jobs and
communities. The Times reported yesterday that 60 senior health
experts—including the heads of the Royal College of Physicians,
the Royal College of Anaesthetists, the Royal College of Midwives
and the Royal Society for Public Health, and dozens of health
charities—have written to my right hon. Friend the Chancellor of
the Exchequer, urging him to put tackling obesity and other
public health issues at the heart of his Budget next month, for
the sake of the economy. The plea is not just about healthcare,
but about the economic vitality and future of our country. That
coalition of doctors, scientists, charity bosses and food
campaigners say that
“poor health is one of the greatest…threats”
facing Britain today and warn that it is damaging the economy in
ways ranging from
“the size and strength of our labour market; to productivity; to
growth and GDP.”
They also say that
“the vast majority of health conditions contributing to…economic
problems are driven by poor diets, alcohol and tobacco.”
They cite the work of the independent Times Health Commission, a
year-long inquiry that called for stronger Government
intervention to tackle the growing obesity crisis and that
recommended a number of interventions to combat obesity,
including expansion of the sugar tax, curbs on cartoons on
packaging and a pre-watershed ban on junk food advertising on
television. The experts urge the Chancellor to issue a formal
call for evidence on
“financial and non-financial health policy options that…make it
easier for everyone to lead healthy lives—by shaping the
environments they grow, learn, work and play in.”
They conclude by advising:
“The public overwhelmingly believe the government should have a
stronger role in acting to create healthy lives and to take
pressure off the NHS.”
The Times editorial of yesterday, under the heading “Body
Politic”, gives a convincing account of the issues and the need
for action. It also notes that merely increasing taxes on already
hard-pressed consumers is not the way forward; we should be
encouraging the switch to healthier products. I agree with that
assessment and find it increasingly worrying that Frontier
Economics estimates that in 2023 the total economic impact of
obesity was £98 billion, accounting for the costs to the NHS and
social care, lost productivity, work inactivity and welfare
payments.
Obesity-related ill health does reduce workforce productivity.
People living with obesity are estimated to have four extra sick
days a year. That is approximately equivalent to an extra 37
million sick days across the UK working population. Estimates put
the annual cost of obesity at 1% to 2% of GDP. With obesity rates
continuing to soar, that is only likely to increase. Obesity
places a heavy burden on the NHS. It contributes to high
workloads in GP surgeries, hospitals and social care, adding to
the pressures that we are already experiencing.
Tackling obesity has actually been on the political agenda for
many years. In 1991, the then Conservative Government recognised
that obesity was a sufficient threat to the health of the nation
to warrant specific action. The first target for reducing obesity
rates in England was set and was to achieve a return by 2005 to
the 1980 level of 7%. Sadly, that target was missed. Over the
last three decades, there have been various strategies, countless
policies and many reforms, with key agencies and teams created
and abolished. Despite that, and as highlighted in the statistics
that I have mentioned, the issue is still very prevalent.
In my own borough of Bexley, the issue of obesity is one where,
statistically, we are performing relatively badly—unlike in other
areas, where Bexley performs extremely well. Last month, Bexley
was dubbed the fattest borough in south-east London, after the
Office for Health Improvement and Disparities published
information on the percentage of adults over 18 who are
classified as obese. According to the report, Bexley has the
worst obesity rate in south-east London at 28% of the population,
yet in recent years we have been successful in my area on health
issues. The stop smoking campaign was a great success, and I was
privileged to be involved in it. The number of smokers in our
borough has considerably reduced because of campaigns by the NHS
and the council, as well as people like me adding to those
campaigns.
We have real issues with childhood obesity, and Bexley council
has endeavoured to be proactive in improving the health of people
across the borough, as well as implementing an obesity strategy
in 2020. Despite that, childhood obesity rates in Bexley have
worsened following the coronavirus pandemic. Figures by NHS
Digital show that 745 of 3,095 year 6 pupils measured in Bexley
were classed as obese or severely obese in 2022-23. Across
England, 13.9% of year 6 pupils were overweight and a staggering
22.7% were obese or severely obese. That was slightly down on the
previous year, but still higher than pre-pandemic figures.
That is extremely worrying, and childhood obesity is a major
public health concern in its own right. Children who are obese
are five times more likely to become obese as adults, and that
puts them at higher risk of the conditions previously
highlighted, as well as shortening their life expectancy. As the
majority of obese children will remain obese as adults, early
intervention is essential. We have to act early in their lives
before they suffer complications later on due to something that
was avoidable.
The Government have taken some action on childhood obesity. In
2018, they set a target of halving childhood obesity in England
by 2030 and reducing the gap in obesity between children from the
most and least deprived areas. While it is necessary, meeting
that target unfortunately does not seem possible at this time.
Despite all the health problems, the impact on lives and the cost
to the economy, we must remember that obesity is preventable in
many cases. Action is required by individuals, parents, schools,
the Government, media and the food and drink manufacturers.
What can and should be done? Basically, as a nation, we are
simply consuming too many calories each day. According to Public
Health England, many adults consume an extra 200 to 300 calories
a day over what they need, while children who are overweight or
obese often consume an additional 500 calories a day. The NHS
needs to do more, as public health improvement will ease the
pressures on GPs and hospitals.
Of course, there needs to be an emphasis on the individual in
tackling obesity. At an individual level, people can limit their
energy intake from fats and sugars, increase their consumption of
healthy food, particularly fruit and vegetables, and engage in
regular physical activity. People who are overweight or obese may
also benefit from joining a local weight loss group, or even from
receiving support and counselling from trained healthcare
professionals to help them to better their relationship with food
and develop different eating habits. More publicity, promotion
and education on food, nutrition and the consequences of a bad
diet are absolutely essential.
Although that is important, tackling obesity is not just about
individual effort; we need to see cultural and environmental
changes too, while ensuring that everybody is given the necessary
information to make healthy choices. Because of our fast-paced
lives, our eating habits have changed in recent decades. There is
a huge increase in people eating fast food, and more people are
eating out, eating higher-calorie foods and buying hot food from
takeaways that is high in fat, salt and often sugar. While it is
good to see businesses thriving, it is incredibly worrying that
some are exacerbating the problem and increasing the sugar and
calorie intake of our nation. Treats are fine, and we should not
be Job’s comforter on these sorts of things, but they should be
for special occasions, rather than the mainstay of an
individual’s diet.
Our food environment affects our behaviour and has a significant
part to play in reducing obesity. Parents are crucial in this as
the primary educators, and education is vital. It can be
difficult to make healthy choices if someone is blissfully
unaware of the content of the food they are eating. I know from
personal experience that, when we do the weekly shop, identifying
the healthiest products is not always easy. That is why we have
to ensure the labelling of products in shops, cafés, restaurants,
coffee shops, fast-food outlets and the rest, so that individuals
can make an informed choice. Essentially, the healthy option
should also be the easier option on the menus for everyone.
Research shows that when Governments act on this issue, they have
a positive effect. Our own Government have done excellent work in
this area. The voluntary traffic-light scheme, which was
introduced jointly by the UK Government and devolved
Administrations in 2013, has been incredibly successful.
Restrictions on the placement of unhealthy foods in supermarkets
and shops have been hugely popular, and they stop shops using
children and pester power to hassle adults into buying those
items. The soft drinks industry levy has had an impact by
encouraging reformulation and decreasing the volume of sugar in
soft drinks.
However, more needs to be done, and advertising on television is
still a real concern. Restrictions before 9 o’clock are due to
come into effect in October 2025, having been originally planned
for 1 January 2023. That delay is disappointing but
understandable. These actions need to be taken, and I know that
my right hon. Friend the Minister will take them on board in the
dynamic way that she does in her role.
In conclusion, serious action is needed, and tackling the obesity
epidemic is a responsibility for all of us—the Government,
schools, families, industry, and politicians—whether local,
regional, national or whatever. Everyone has a part to play. It
is also something that I think we can unite on across this House,
because it is an issue that affects everyone’s constituents and
every person in the country. I know that the Opposition and
Government would want to work together with the Scottish
nationalists, and others in the Chamber, to ensure that we do
this. If we do not, it will cost our NHS billions of pounds a
year and have a huge detrimental economic impact. Most
importantly of all, it affects our constituents, and particularly
our children.
With strategic policy interventions, we have an opportunity to
turn the tide against obesity, improve our nations’ health,
enhance people’s quality of life, prevent needless early deaths
and secure the economic future of our nation. I hope that my
right hon. Friend the Minister will carefully consider what I
have said, and that colleagues on both sides of the House will
endorse the fact that action is required.
4.48pm
(Somerton and Frome) (LD)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship this afternoon, Mr
Dowd. I congratulate the right hon. Member for Bexleyheath and
Crayford ( ) on securing this important
debate. Whenever possible, I like to talk about the
accomplishments of my constituents. One constituent of mine made
an outstanding contribution to tackling obesity eight years ago,
and I am glad that the hon. Member has recognised their efforts,
because that constituent is the former Chancellor, who introduced
the soft drinks levy in 2016.
That policy has meant a 46% fall in average sugar levels per soft
drink product since 2015. Sales have not been affected; actually,
they have increased by 14.9% over 4 years. That levy has been a
remarkable success. The Medical Research Council estimates that
it has prevented about 5,000 cases of obesity in year 6 girls,
and 5,500 hospital admissions for children with tooth decay
within five years. This is unambiguous and indisputable.
Interventionist health policies are the only way to solve our
obesity crisis, because the food system in this country is rigged
against us.
This is not just a crisis. In Somerset, 34.6% of children leave
primary school overweight or obese, but 21.8% of five-year-old
children start primary school overweight or obese. In 2021, 60%
of adults in Somerset were overweight or obese. We should be one
of the healthiest countries in the world—we have an NHS that
covers every citizen, a mild climate and a high level of economic
development—but we are not. Thirty years of failed Government
obesity policies tell us that we must change. A University of
Cambridge team analysed 30 years of Government obesity policies
in England—14 obesity strategies with 689 individual actions.
Eight per cent fulfilled seven criteria identified by researchers
as necessary for successful implementation, and 29% did not meet
a single criterion.
We have tried blaming the individual, and it has not worked. It
is not just remiss; it is wrong. The charity Beat reported
that
“strategies harmful to people with eating disorders appear…to be
ineffective at reducing obesity.”
By refusing to change the system and telling people that they are
to blame, we are killing people who are already vulnerable, and
there is a consensus. Polling last September from the Food,
Farming and Countryside Commission and More in Common showed that
77% of participants wanted Government to put health standards
over cost, and 67% thought that the Government were not doing
enough to safeguard children against unhealthy food and drinks.
The status quo simply cannot continue. Our farmers are underpaid,
undervalued and underused in a food system that does not
prioritise healthy local food of high standard. Small and medium
UK agrifood businesses cannot compete with cheap, ultra-processed
food. Our NHS staff are so overwhelmed in dealing with the
results of obesity that they have little time or budget to deal
with the causes.
We Liberal Democrats want a robust, thorough obesity and food
strategy that meets all seven standards specified by Cambridge.
We want junk food advertising restricted on TV and online, as the
right hon. Member for Bexleyheath and Crayford has mentioned. We
want public sector food procurement strategies that benefit the
farmers and local businesses producing the food. We want to
extend the “polluter pays” principle that we have for water
companies. We want to make junk food giants either change their
ways or pay their way.
As a serving Somerset councillor, I know how vital it is to
empower local authorities to develop and manage tailored
strategies in their areas. We should give local authorities more
power over planning to prevent high streets being clogged up with
cheap fast food outlets, and to restrict junk food advertising.
Let them develop food partnerships with farmers and agrifood
businesses. We must have a new, interventionist approach to our
food system. All other approaches have failed. It makes economic
sense, environmental sense and moral sense. Let us make a better
food future.
(in the Chair)
I am going to give Members five minutes each. The Opposition
spokespersons will have five, and the Minister will have
ten.4.53pm
(South West Bedfordshire)
(Con)
I congratulate my right hon. Friend the Member for Bexleyheath
and Crayford ( ), and I agree with pretty
much everything that the hon. Member for Somerton and Frome
() has just said as well. In July
2020, the House of Lords produced an excellent Select Committee
report, “Hungry for change: fixing the failures in food”, which
is pretty shocking. We are one of the most overweight nations in
Europe, and that is not an accident, because our diet is pretty
appalling. Page 19 of that report says:
“In the UK, more than half (50.7%) of all total dietary energy
from purchases came from highly processed foods, compared to only
10.2% in Portugal and 13.4% in Italy.”
Our diets are so much worse than those of our fellow European
nations. We are bombarded with advertising for unhealthy food. In
2017, £300 million was spent on the advertising of less healthy
foods, compared with only £16 million a day on fruit and
vegetables. We are doing really badly at even getting our five
portions of fruit and vegetables a day. Only 31% of adults, and
only 8% of teenagers, are achieving that; parents in the room
will recognise that challenge.
All these figures are worst for the poorest members of our
society. I commend The Times on its excellent health commission
report and on some of its recommendations. It thinks it is
outrageous that some of these highly processed foods can have
“natural” and “organic” on the front of the packaging. That is
deceptive and misleading, and many of the big food producers have
a lot to answer for. The Times says that all children should
learn to cook properly and that those lessons should be inspected
by Ofsted with as much rigour as maths and English. This matters.
If people turn up to university able only to open a packet and
put it in the microwave, they are probably not set for the most
healthy life and it will probably cost them more as well.
Children are bombarded with these images. Bite Back, with which I
have worked very closely, wants to get rid of the use of cartoon
characters and other tactics that appeal to children, which hook
our young people into unhealthy food. The Times also says that we
should not have just environmental, social and governance for our
businesses; it should be environmental, social, governance and
health because employers can do their bit as well.
How do we know how many calories we are eating each day? I, as a
man, am supposed to eat no more than 2,500 calories a day. For
women, it is 2,000. How do we know? The signs in some of the
restaurants are tiny. Let us make it easy for people to do the
right thing. That is a generally quite a good strapline: make the
right thing the easy and affordable thing to do. I salute my
local markets in Leighton Buzzard, Dunstable and Houghton Regis,
which provide fresh fruit and veg and often at very good prices;
I have to say that my supermarkets do so as well. We all know
that exercise is important, but I have a little caveat on that:
you cannot outrun a bad diet, but exercise is always brilliant
for all of us and we should all do more of it.
It was great to hear the speech from the Liberal Democrats
because this is not a nanny state, entirely private matter. This
is why: children don’t get to choose what they eat. They get fed
what their parents give them; what we feed our children really
matters. We have to be honest; there is limited supply in the NHS
for all of us, so if other people eat really bad food, that means
that NHS capacity is being taken up with dealing with type 2
diabetes, cancer, heart problems and other issues. We all have a
stake in us all eating well, and I hope we can combine on that
issue.
4.58pm
(Putney) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Dowd. I
congratulate the right hon. Member for Bexleyheath and Crayford
( ) on securing this important
debate. As he said, it affects all MPs because it affects all our
constituencies. It affects families across the country.
I am here because I recently visited Putneymead Group Medical
Practice in my constituency. It is a really large surgery, which
serves 25,500 people and employs 23 GPs. They know what they are
talking about; it is an excellent facility. I asked the doctors
what the main issues were they were facing, and they said that
the main issue was childhood obesity. They were worried that the
current state of the NHS meant that it was unable to provide
services to combat childhood obesity, and they were also worried
about the lack of services for primary school children. Early
intervention is very important in tackling childhood obesity, but
they were also concerned about secondary education. They
mentioned Wandsworth Borough Council provision for primary school
children, but that ends at year 6. In secondary school, there is
even less provision and support for tackling obesity, and they
identified that as a key issue.
Today, two in every five children in England are overweight or
obese by the time they finish primary school. That has lasting
consequences for their physical and mental health and for their
quality of life. The national child measurement programme found
that in 2021-22, 10% of reception-age children in England were
obese. The proportions were higher among year 6 children, with
23.4% being obese. Something is going wrong in our provision and
support programmes for primary school children.
Childhood obesity is a significant concern in my borough of
Wandsworth, where more than one fifth of children in reception
are overweight or living with obesity. In year 6, that figure
rises to 37.7%, which is higher than in the rest of the country.
Wandsworth Council has several programmes to tackle the issue.
The Health4Life team runs the Mums, Minis and KickStart
programmes for primary school-age children and their families.
The children’s school food strategy and the campaign targeting
takeaways near secondary schools are also having an impact, but
that needs to be amplified and supported by having the same
programmes across the country. As I said, this support needs to
be maintained and to continue through secondary education, as
well as through primary. In the United Kingdom, the prevalence of
obesity among year 10 children is still 23.4%, so one in four
children are still classified as obese—in London, the figure is
still 37.4%.
It is essential to continue promoting healthy lifestyles, but
there are also significant infrastructure issues. There is an
issue around planning and having shops with healthy produce in
the right places so that they are easier to access for people who
do not have the same transport options as others. We also need to
tackle takeaways near secondary schools, which Wandsworth Council
is starting to do, and there are elements of good practice that
can be learned. In addition, we need to tackle inactivity in
schools. Many playing fields have been sold off, which has
reduced access to physical education classes in school. I have
seen that with my own children, who have gone through secondary
school with significantly less access to PE lessons than I had
when I was going through school.
There is also the issue of healthy eating and teaching cookery. I
pay tribute to a great community organisation in my constituency
called Bags of Taste, which teaches people how to eat better for
less. It has a really high take-up, and people really enjoy
making the kind of food they would get from a takeaway but can
cook for less money in their own homes. That is to be applauded
and supported.
There could also be much more action taken by supermarkets, and
action on advertising unhealthy food. Another excellent programme
that I have seen really working, but that is not taken up
comprehensively enough, is the Daily Mile
Having started off with a school in Stirling in Scotland, it has
been taken up by many primary schools around the country. It is
tackling this issue and making a difference.
To conclude, Labour will tackle childhood obesity through a range
of measures, including by implementing the 9 pm watershed for
junk food advertising, getting kids moving through a mandatory
national curriculum with a wider range of physical activities,
providing free breakfast clubs in every primary school and taking
action to end the promotion of junk foods targeted at children.
We will take action. The current obesity figures are a damning
indictment of 14 years of Tory rule that have not worked. It is
time for Labour.
5.03pm
(Erewash) (Con)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Dowd. I
congratulate my right hon. Friend the Member for Bexleyheath and
Crayford ( ) on securing this debate.
Tackling obesity is preventing ill health; I want to make it very
clear that it is not nanny state, because good health provides
choices.
We are already looking at these issues through the way we are
tackling smoking, and I commend my right hon. Friend the Minister
for her proposed actions on that. Smoking is an addiction, and
obesity is becoming an addiction—an addiction to food high in
fat, salt or sugar. We need similar, world-leading action to
tackle obesity. The Obesity Health Alliance has said that obesity
is the new smoking.
We have already heard that 30% of adults are obese, and 25% of
children starting school are either obese or overweight, so we
need to take serious action. The food giants are making us
addicted to food that is high in fat, salt and sugar, so we need
to tackle that in the same way we are tackling smoking.
Obesity causes cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, cancer
and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. The reason the food giants
are spending huge amounts on advertising chocolate, crisps,
biscuits and ice cream—much of which is marketed at children—is
that those products make them huge amounts of profit. I am not
against profit, but I am when it comes at the expense of people’s
health, and particularly the health of our children.
A recent study by the University of Oxford shows that, for seven
of the top 10 global food manufacturers, two thirds of their food
and drink sales in Britain came from unhealthy foods. In 2022, it
was estimated that the biggest manufacturers spent £55 million on
online adverts for food and drink products associated with
childhood obesity. I have no doubt that that did not decrease in
2023, and I do not think it will decrease this year either.
In addition to the marketing, the packaging of unhealthy food is
designed to appeal to children, as my hon. Friend the Member for
South West Bedfordshire () implied. In a way, the issue
is similar to the way disposable vapes are marketed to children.
That is another issue my right hon. Friend the Minister is
tackling, but we need to sort out the way unhealthy foods are
marketed to children too. Children and young people do not ask to
be bombarded with the ads they see time and time again, yet they
are being bombarded—they cannot escape them at all. That is why
Government action is needed, and needed now. I ask my right hon.
Friend the Minister to update the House on the progress being
made to implement the measures in section 172 of, and schedule 18
to, the Health and Care Act 2022 on the advertising of less
healthy food and drink and to ensure that we are on schedule to
deliver those messages.
Going back a number of years, as the hon. Member for Somerton and
Frome () mentioned, the then Chancellor
of the Exchequer introduced the soft drinks industry levy. People
at the time said it would not work, but it has; it has cut huge
amounts of sugar out of soft drinks across the board. We need to
look at how we replicate that measure for other foodstuffs. I am
proud that I was a member of the Health and Social Care Committee
when it asked for it to be put in place. It is one of the
Committee’s great achievements, and we can do even more. We need
to apply that type of measure across food and drink production to
incentivise healthier food and drink. Manufacturers and retailers
want a level playing field, so it is important that we do
that.
In conclusion, we need to tackle obesity, which the Government
first identified as a priority in the early 1990s in the “Health
of the Nation” White Paper. Over 30 years on, we are still only
talking about tackling obesity. The health of our nation is
running out of time. We need action, and we need it now.
5.08pm
(East Dunbartonshire)
(SNP)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Mr Dowd. I
congratulate the right hon. Member for Bexleyheath and Crayford
( ) on securing this debate. In
the context of the ongoing Tory cost of living crisis and an
increasingly unhealthy population, it is important that it takes
place, so I welcome his bringing it to the Chamber. Huge
financial pressure and high food prices are forcing families to
eat less healthily, getting cheaper calories from unhealthy
foods. There is a clear link between deprivation and obesity,
which is why tackling health inequalities and poverty are top
priorities for the SNP Scottish Government.
We have heard lots of interesting contributions. The right hon.
Member for Bexleyheath and Crayford touched on junk food
advertising, and I discussed that exact issue with the University
of Glasgow earlier this afternoon. We need to be incredibly
mindful of where, what and when we are advertising; otherwise, we
will have an often detrimental impact on health inequalities.
The hon. Member for Somerton and Frome () spoke a great deal about child
obesity, which I will come on to. I very much agree with her on
that point, but I would welcome an intervention from her on how
the Liberal Democrat party’s abandonment of free tuition is
impacting household budgets, and thus people’s ability to access
healthy foods.
It was hugely welcome that the hon. Member for Putney () mentioned
the Daily Mile which
originated in Stirling. It was nice to hear a non-Scottish Member
cast light on a project that originated in Scotland, so I
certainly welcome that comment.
Obesity is a problem that is escalating on a global scale, but
sadly the effects are being felt severely in Scotland. According
to a survey, 67% of adults are deemed overweight and a third of
children are at risk of becoming overweight. That same survey
found that obesity was more common in households with lower
incomes—a correlation we know and recognise all too well. That is
why I and my SNP colleagues are consistently calling on the UK
Government to take action to tackle the cost of living crisis,
improve universal credit and reverse their policies that deny
families crucial support.
The Scottish Government do not have the levers to be able to do
those things at the moment. They therefore mitigate the bad
political decisions made in this place, reducing family household
costs by providing free prescriptions, free school meals, free
childcare, free period products, free university education and
free bus travel for those under 22 and over 60; freezing council
tax; providing the young carer grant, the Scottish child payment,
and both adult and child disability payments; and mitigating the
bedroom tax, the rape clause, the benefits cap and real-terms
cuts to social security.
Earlier today I met Professor Iain McInnes of the University of
Glasgow, whose project, “Creating Healthier Places: A Place-Based
Approach to Research & Partnership”, factors access to
healthy foods into its research on 20-minute neighbourhoods. It
is a fascinating project, and I urge the Minister to have a look
at it—I think she would be just as impressed as I am.
Through the best start grant and best start foods applications,
the Scottish Government have also provided over £180 million to
low-income families to help with expenses during their children’s
early years. The eligibility for best start foods will be
expanding so that a further 20,000 people can access support to
buy healthy food. Such steps are essential to ensure that support
is there for the least well-off families to be able to make
healthy food choices.
In my constituency, new data from Cancer Research has shown that
22.5% of four to five-year-olds are overweight or obese—that is
four to five-year-olds who are already increasing their risk of
serious illnesses. That is not a choice by those children or
their parents, but a symptom of families not having the resources
to provide healthy options. It is a symptom of 14 years of
austerity. It is a symptom of being tied to this broken
Westminster system.
I know that the Minister cares deeply about these issues and will
give a compassionate and considerate response. I simply urge her
to mirror some of the policies the Scottish Government are taking
on tackling health inequalities. That is why in Scotland, all
pupils in primaries 1 to 5, all children in additional support
needs schools, and eligible pupils in primary 6 through to S6 can
benefit from free school meals—the most generous free school
meals offer anywhere in these isles, saving families—
(in the Chair)
Order. I call .
5.13pm
(Birmingham, Edgbaston)
(Lab/Co-op)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Mr Dowd. I thank
the right hon. Member for Bexleyheath and Crayford ( ) for securing this debate.
He has been a strong campaigner for tackling childhood obesity
over many years, and I thank him for his remarks today.
As many colleagues have rightly highlighted, the obesity epidemic
is a genuine crisis. It will be the next big public health issue
that we will all be talking about in a few years. Some 60% of us
are now overweight. One in four children in England are now obese
by the time they leave primary school. That means that those
children are five times more likely to go on to develop serious
and life-limiting diet-related conditions in adulthood, such as
diabetes, cardiovascular disease, liver disease and certain forms
of cancer. Of course, that means more pressure on the NHS, which,
as we know, is already buckling under the weight of demand after
years of mismanagement by this Government. It is a disaster for
the taxpayer: Frontier Economics estimates the impact of obesity
to be £98 billion a year in NHS and social care costs, lost
productivity, workforce inactivity and welfare payments.
I thank many Members for rightly focusing their remarks today on
the poor food environments in which children are growing up, and
what we as policymakers can do about that. In recent decades,
action on obesity has overwhelmingly focused on measures to get
people to change their behaviours without tackling the structural
factors that influence them. We know that that is not enough. For
example, 99.9% of us know that it is important to get our five a
day, most of us can tell each other what a healthy diet looks
like, and every week there seems to be some new fad diet. The
bottom line is the nation’s waistline: Britain is getting
fatter.
It is therefore disappointing to see the Secretary of State say
that she believes the priority for preventing obesity is to give
people information about nutrition with no measures to fix the
food environment. It appears to be at odds with her views on
tobacco, where the Government have rightly taken up measures to
further protect children from tobacco harm. She does not believe
that measures to inform children about the dangers of tobacco are
alone sufficient to solve that issue, so why does she believe
this for obesity? If giving people more information is the
solution, can the Minister explain why obesity rates are twice as
high in our poorest areas than the richest?
Labour believes that every community in the UK should be a
healthy place for children to grow up, learn and play. Businesses
need a healthy workforce to drive economic productivity and
sustainable growth. It is the Government’s job to make the
healthy choice the easy choice. There was a moment in 2020 when
it looked like every party across the House believed this. The
Government brought forward the 2020 obesity strategy, welcomed by
doctors, parents and health charities, and as the right hon.
Member for Bexleyheath and Crayford said, it received cross-party
support.
The strategy contained evidence-based measures to begin to fix
the food system by stopping our children from being bombarded
with junk food adverts as part of a major commitment to halve
childhood obesity by 2030. I would like to ask the Government
today what has happened to that commitment, since they kicked
that flagship policy into the long grass, delaying the policy for
the next Government to deal with in October 2025. Are the
Government still committed to halving childhood obesity by 2030,
and what have they done since delaying the junk food advertising
policies?
The need for action has not gone away, as we have heard today.
The health of our children is in a dire state, and it is getting
worse. It was once thought that it was essentially impossible for
children to develop type 2 diabetes so early in life as a result
of their diet, but as mentioned by the right hon. Member for
Bexleyheath and Crayford, we are now seeing thousands of cases of
children developing the condition, with more every year. Nearly
four in 10 children with obesity are estimated to have early
stage fatty liver disease, and tooth decay remains the single
largest cause of hospitalisations for young children in
England.
The Government assure us that the regulations on junk food
advertising were delayed merely to give industry more time to
prepare. If this is the case, why have the Government refused to
bring out the supporting secondary legislation for these
regulations, which are now months overdue? Surely the Minister
agrees that it would help the industry prepare for these
regulations to have this detail available to them now. Industry
will want to tackle the structural drivers of ill health and be
led by evidence, not ideology. That starts with delivering the
measures the Government have failed to implement to protect
children from junk food.
We will restrict adverts for foods high in fat, sugar and salt in
favour of healthier options. We will improve children’s diets by
finally implementing the 9pm watershed for junk food advertising
on television and ban paid-for advertising of less healthy foods
in online media. Tackling health inequalities is a central part
of Labour’s health mission. We will not resort to the tired
excuses that would blame families in Blackpool for having poorer
health than someone in Banbury. Instead, we need to focus on
making healthy food more affordable and accessible. Schools will
have a role and responsibility within that, which is why our
fully funded breakfast clubs in every primary school in England
will serve healthy and balanced food to embed healthy habits and
boost children’s concentration and development.
The Government undertook some assessments of the health impacts
of the national school breakfast programme when it was running.
It would be really good to hear what some of the evidence was. We
heard from schools that it improved pupil behaviour, their
readiness to learn, social skills and their eating habits. To
conclude, I want to leave Members with a statistic to reflect
just how stark this issue is. Not only are our children fatter
than their peers in other European countries, but they are
actually shorter than their European peers.
5.18pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Health and Social
Care (Dame )
I congratulate my right hon. Friend the Member for Bexleyheath
and Crayford ( ) on raising this important
issue. I thank all hon. Members for their contributions. There is
no doubt that this country faces an obesity challenge. I am
reassured by the contributions from everybody that none of us
underestimate the scale of the task ahead.
As others have said, two thirds of adults in this country are
overweight or living with obesity, increasing their risk of many
serious diseases. Tackling it head on is not just the right thing
for patients but makes good economic sense too. Obesity-related
conditions cost our NHS £6.5 billion directly every year and the
cost to wider society is a staggering £57 billion. As my right
hon. Friend the Member for Bexleyheath and Crayford said, some
estimates put it at over £90 billion.
My great passion is for giving every baby the best start for
life. There is no doubt that prevention is not only kinder but
much cheaper than cure. Food given to babies and young children
helps establish food preferences at an early age, so it is vital
that we build healthy eating patterns as soon as possible.
Nearly one in 10 children starting primary school are already
living with obesity, doubling to nearly one in five by the time
they leave. Growing numbers of children with excess weight are,
as hon. Members have said, developing health conditions once
rarely seen in childhood such as high blood pressure. Every child
needs an environment that helps them to thrive and reach their
full potential. Of course, that is easier said than done. There
is no single solution, no magic bullet to solve the problem. That
is why we are delivering an ambitious programme with four
strands: first, we are supporting families to make healthier
choices through more advice and better information. That starts
at the very beginning of life with our national breastfeeding
helpline for parents who need support. The Start for Life website
is a rich source of helpful advice.
We are backing family hubs with £300 million so that new mums and
dads have the best advice, including on children’s nutrition,
with one-stop shops across England. Weaning is a critical time
for establishing healthy eating, so we are working on voluntary
industry guidelines to reduce levels of sugar and salt in
commercial food and drink aimed at children up to 36 months. We
have begun a four-week period of engaging with industry to make
sure we get that right.
For older children, families and adults, we provide a range of
materials, tools and apps to encourage eating better and moving
more. That can all be found on our Better Health website. I
encourage all hon. Members to recommend it to their
constituents.
I am proud of action that we have taken to mandate calorie
labelling on websites and delivery apps for all large
restaurants, cafés and takeaways. We have prohibited the
promotion of less healthy products at key selling locations to
help people stave off impulse buys, because we all know that
people are not making those choices consciously. They are
unconscious choices being hugely promoted by incredibly strong
advertising and marketing. We know it can be very challenging for
some families to make healthier choices, so we are investing over
£200 million a year on three health food schemes: healthy start,
the nursery milk scheme and the school fruit and vegetable
scheme.
Secondly, we are promoting more physical activity, which helps
people maintain a healthier weight. The Government are investing
over £600 million in school sports over the next two years via
the PE and sport premium and School Games Organiser network so
that children can get more active. We also have the Couch to 5K
and Active 10 apps to promote everyone getting more active.
The third measure is supporting those already overweight or obese
to achieve and maintain a healthier weight. We have delivered a
free NHS weight loss app, and local authorities are funding local
weight loss services from their public health grants. The NHS
provides a digital weight management programme and many
specialist services. We are now exploring ways to increase access
to the newest weight loss drugs for more people who are
eligible.
Fourthly—a really critical point, as lots of right hon. and hon.
Members have raised—is our work with the food industry itself.
Sadly, there has been a long-term trend towards producing and
marketing foods high in calories, saturated fat, salt and sugar—a
race to the bottom. We will reverse that trend. Our soft drinks
industry levy has already made huge strides in bringing down the
sugar content of soft drinks by almost half between 2015 and
2020, removing a staggering 46,000 tonnes of sugar. Our voluntary
reformulation programme requires all sectors of industry to
reduce levels of sugar, calories and salt in the everyday food
and drink that people buy. If we can see this through, consumers
will have many fewer calories in their diet without them having
to consciously change what they eat.
Although the salt and sugar reduction programmes have brought
some progress, there is much more to be done. The calorie
reduction progress report published this month showed little
change in calorie levels between 2017 and 2021. I have asked
industry to meet the reduction targets for calories and sugar by
the end of 2025. We will leave no stone unturned if they do not
live up to our expectations.
I am pleased to assure the House and my hon. Friend the Member
for Erewash () that we remain committed to
introducing further advertising restrictions to reduce the
marketing of less healthy foods to children. We will also bring
in restrictions on volume price promotions, such as three for the
price of two, on less healthy foods in October next year, and we
will back local government in using its powers to support a
healthy local food environment.
Obesity is a significant challenge, not just in the UK but
globally. We all have our part to play. I have personally been
engaging with industry throughout my career, from the Treasury,
to the then Department for Business, Energy and Industrial
Strategy, to the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural
Affairs. Business people say they want a brighter future for all
our children. I plan to make sure that they deliver on that.
5.26pm
I thank everyone who has participated today in a very
constructive way. That is the way we should all be addressing
such an important issue. I particularly thank the Minister for
her excellent response. We have had some really good issues
raised by colleagues on all sides, and by the Minister.
I look forward to us all doing something to make sure that the
crisis of obesity is overcome. It is so important, particularly
for our children, but also for adults, and for quality of life. I
am grateful for Members’ participation and for the ideas that
have come forward, which we will look at and consider. I know the
Minister will take them away, and I particularly thank her.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered tackling obesity.
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